Post on 01-Oct-2020
transcript
MEET THE DUTY OFFICER: KATHY MELLINGER OF DILLON
Caught you at your best ….
June 2018
RED ALERTS!
K athy Mellinger was a new
duty officer when a call
came in that still sticks with
her. Two disaster action
team members were reporting in after
returning from a late-night fire at a remote
farm. Because of the intensity of the fire
and at the direction of the fire chief, the
women parked a long way from the fire and
walked to the scene in the dark, encounter-
ing a canal filled with water and plenty of
other obstacles.
When they arrived, they found five
young men wearing nothing but their pa-
jamas, shivering in the cold as they
watched everything they owned, including
their life savings, burn. The responders
wrapped them in blankets and comforted
them. The farm workers spoke only a few
words of English and were in complete
disbelief that someone would come all this
way in the dark to find them. They fought
off tears as they tried to thank those Red
Cross volunteers.
“I was getting a little choked up when
the DAT (responder) said in a tired but
confident voice, ‘This is why we do this,’”
Mellinger said. “And I thought, ‘Yes it is.’”
Mellinger joined the Red Cross of Great-
er Idaho and Montana in 2016, already with
decades of volunteerism under her belt.
She’s been a camp counselor and literacy
tutor, a children’s grief support facilitator
and an equine-assisted therapy assistant.
The Mellingers always planned to retire
to Montana because of family ties and love
of the outdoors. They bought property in
the 2000s and built an off-grid home north
of Dillon, where she retired after 30 years
‘This is why we do this’ ON THE
HORIZON
In the know: Welcome to the team FUNDRAISING: Bryce Sitter
will join the Red
Cross of Greater
Idaho and Montana in
early July as the
regional chief devel-
opment officer. He
was worked for non-
profits for 20 years, most recently as
a regional philanthropy officer in
fund development in Iowa. During
his career, he spent more than a
decade in East Africa, addressing
needs such as food security, educa-
tion and disease prevention. Bryce
and his wife have two children,
Karsten, 4, and Levi, 6.
VOLUNTEER SERVICES:
Thank you to all of our Volunteer
Services team members. We have 24
volunteers who do everything from
intake to training. Because of their
hard work, we have recruited and
placed 350 new volunteers this year!
DAT CHANGES: Important
Disaster Action Team structure
changes are happening throughout
the country. Please look for an email
from Catherine Rawsthorne titled
“IMPORTANT Changes to DAT
Program.” Direct questions to your
leadership teams, or to cathe-
rine.rawsthorne2@americanredcross
.onmicrosoft.com.
MILESTONES
DALLAS
ERICKSON,
10 years
DARWIN PUG-
MIRE, 10 years
MIKE RYAN,
10 years
SANDRA CAIN,
5 years
FRANK
WILLY, 5 years
MARY WIEST,
5 years
Red Cross staffers and volunteers teamed up in Billings in May to install 80 smoke alarms
and make 60 homes safer. Twenty-nine children were made safer because of these efforts.
Keeping our volunteer partners engaged and informed
LEFT: Disaster Program Manager Abbra Firman
distributes supplies to volunteers Michelle Kay
and Alex Shin. ABOVE: Montana board chair-
man Tom Wozniak installs a bed shaker alarm for
former Red Cross volunteer Ron Wachtman.
Volunteers
joined the
Montana and
Idaho Red
Cross in May
Missing
Types
campaign,
June 11-July 3,
visit
www.redcrossbl
ood.org/Missing
Types to learn
more.
22
13,275 Hours logged in
May by 459
local volunteers.
16 Disaster
responses in
May. Families
helped: 19.
Kathy Mellinger’s support team includes
her two dogs, Jick and Karma. She has
served as a duty officer since 2016.
STORY CONTINUES ON PAGE 2
Visit us on Facebook at facebook.com/RedCrossIdaho or at facebook.com/MontanaRedCross, on Twitter at
twitter.com/montanaredcross or twitter.com/redcrossidaho and on Instagram at Idaho.montana.redcross
Diana Ochsner has deployed
many times with the Red Cross
through the years, from Colorado to
Kentucky, North Carolina to Louisi-
ana. But one story from a deploy-
ment to Sugar Land, Texas, last fall
following Hurricane Harvey has
stuck with her more than most.
It’s a story of kindness, serendipi-
ty and a little puppy love.
Ochsner, of Jerome, and fellow
Red Cross volunteer Julie Fox, of
Rochester, N.Y., were at a kitchen
operation in Sugar Land when a car
pulled up. A woman got out, puppy
in hand. She was a Hurricane Har-
vey survivor who was leaving the
state, and she dropped the puppy in
Fox’s lap and quickly drove away.
Ochsner and Fox got the little guy
some water and then went to a
store to buy him food.
Ochsner called the local
shelter to see if they
could take the animal,
but they were so over-
whelmed following the
hurricane it took them
several days to call back.
So Fox stepped in,
caring for the abandoned
pup.
A shelter eventually took the dog,
assuring Fox she could visit him
anytime, which she did as often as
possible. They had become quite
attached, and both cried each time it
came time for Fox to leave.
A few days later, the shelter
called to see if Fox wanted to adopt
the Catahoula. Fox agreed.
“All of us were crying,” said
Ochsner, who has volunteered with
the Red Cross of Greater Idaho
since 2012. “We all got attached to
the orphaned puppy very quickly,
but Julie and the puppy bonded
immediately. The deployment was a
very difficult one so
when this event hap-
pened, it was a little
sunshine in the middle
of a bad storm.”
An American Red Cross
media team happened to
be in Sugar Land at the
time and photographed
the whole thing.
A week later, the pup
was bound for his new home in
Rochester, riding in a crate donated
by the shelter.
For Fox, this new friendship had
special meaning, a friendship born
from the ashes. The year before,
Fox lost her cat and dog to a home
fire.
She gave her little hurricane
survivor a fitting name – Harvey.
“Everything happens for a rea-
son,” Fox said. “This puppy was
meant for me to take back home.
“He has been a ray of sunshine.
My hope is the past owners know
what an unselfish act they bestowed
on him given their situation. And
they can rest easy knowing he is
well taken care of.”
— By Matt Ochsner
Idaho volunteer Diana Ochsner, right, hugs Julie Fox of Rochester, N.Y.,
after Fox agreed to adopt a puppy left behind during Hurricane Harvey.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
as a chemist with Battelle Toxicolo-
gy Northwest in Richland, Wash.
After the move, she began looking
online for a new volunteer oppor-
tunity. That’s when she found infor-
mation about the Red Cross.
“I had not intended to be a duty
officer when I looked through the
opportunities but have always be-
lieved that a volunteer should go
where they are needed, and at that
time, I was told our region really
needed duty officers,” she said.
As a duty officer, Mellinger takes
calls from the field during disasters
such as a house fire — calls that
often come from fire departments or
emergency dispatch, but sometimes
directly from the families them-
selves. She finds a local team who
can respond, coordinates that de-
ployment, helps chart a roadmap for
client assistance and verifies the
disaster responders make it home
safely.
“No two calls are ever the same,”
she said. “You have to get the basics
and decide how best to deal with it.
You can’t write everything in the
manual.”
She’s hospice trained and has a
background in grief support, which
has helped prepare her for the emo-
tional ups and downs that come with
being a duty officer. She also works
part time in registration at the local
emergency room – another good
training ground for those in the
world of disaster.
Though she has never met any of
the Red Cross disaster responders in
person, she has tremendous respect
for what they do and why they do it.
“I speak to some of them several
times and I think ‘man, do you ever
sleep,’” Mellinger laughed.
“It’s a calling, a passion for them.
They are genuine and caring. They
know that if they don’t do it, that
person is standing out there in one of
the worst times of their life wonder-
ing why no one is out there to help
them.”
Mellinger works the 6 a.m. to
noon shift mostly, backed by her
support team – her husband Sean
and their two dogs, Karma and Jick.
Sean keeps the computer and phones
working while Karma and Jick get
her up in the morning and lay on the
office couch while she reviews cases
before her shift starts.
“Spend 10 hours volunteering
with Red Cross and you will have a
100 percent different view of the
organization,” she said. “When you
stop and think of the enormity of
this organization and how well it
functions with the number of volun-
teers it has, it boggles my mind. It
will change your heart.”
In 2017, Mellinger also became a
duty officer coach.
“I consider it a privilege to be a
tiny part of the American Red Cross
team,” she said.
“A lot of times when someone is
in pain people shy away from them.
We at the Red Cross go toward that
person.”
— By Matt Ochsner
YOUR TURN: Would you like to
become a duty officer? Visit
www.montanaredcross.org
to learn more.
Idaho volunteer moved by act of ‘puppy love’ during hurricane deployment
Sunshine in a storm
RED ALERTS! Page 2
Mellinger: No two calls are the same
Julie Fox and Harvey formed a
special bond almost immediately
after they met.
”
“ Everything
happens for a
reason. This
puppy was
meant for me to
take back
home.